To me, writing diary is very awkward. I haven’t written any diary in my life. This is my very fist diary entry. I don’t know where to begin. I will just list the event happened through my 59 years of life. My name is Matsui Iwane, born on July 27th, 1878. My father was a former samurai retainer of the Tokugawa clan of Owari han. Harsh military trainings I received was very natural under a father like this. When I look back at my childhood, all I can remember is my father shouting, “Move faster! To make our family proud all you need to do is to become a military general!”
I graduated Imperial Japanese Army Academy when I was nineteen. I was a pugnacious kid by then. It is ridiculous when I think of it now, but my close friend Nobuyuki Abe - who is now a prime minister of Japan - and I pledged in the school backyard on the graduation day. We chanted our school song in union, and promised to become a famous general. Well, he actually became a prime minister now, so I guess he didn’t completely broke the promise. He got the ‘famous’ part right. These days, even though I want to meet him I can’t.
That was off the topic. I entered the Russo-Japanese War of 1904 when I was twenty-six years old. By then I was attending Army Staff College. Anyhow, since it was the first war I’ve ever experienced, I was filled with horror and nervousness, enough to forget the promise made with Abe. The bullets flied all over the place and I still remember my friend’s bleeding ribs. Fortunately I survived through the war, but it was just an awful experience. I can’t even count how many times I urinated in my pants.
Until now, I was even promoted as a major general in 1929, fought against Bolshevik Army of USSR, and assigned as a commanding officer in several wars. I, Matsui Iwane, stand here as a commander of the Japanese Shanghai Expeditionary Force (SEF) of the Second Sino-Japanese War. I kept the promise
Tomorrow, I am leaving to Nanking. At Nanking, I planned to break the power of Chaing Kai-shek’s party. If I successfully finish my military operation in Nanking, my name as a military general will be immortal in Japanese history, Chinese history, and World history. I can never make any mistake. I cannot let my family down.
Nov. 13th 1937
To me, writing diary is very awkward. I haven’t written any diary in my life. This is my very fist diary entry. I don’t know where to begin. I will just list the event happened through my 59 years of life. My name is Matsui Iwane, born on July 27th, 1878. My father was a former samurai retainer of the Tokugawa clan of Owari han. Harsh military trainings I received was very natural under a father like this. When I look back at my childhood, all I can remember is my father shouting, “Move faster! To make our family proud all you need to do is to become a military general!”
I graduated Imperial Japanese Army Academy when I was nineteen. I was a pugnacious kid by then. It is ridiculous when I think of it now, but my close friend Nobuyuki Abe - who is now a prime minister of Japan - and I pledged in the school backyard on the graduation day. We chanted our school song in union, and promised to become a famous general. Well, he actually became a prime minister now, so I guess he didn’t completely broke the promise. He got the ‘famous’ part right. These days, even though I want to meet him I can’t.
That was off the topic. I entered the Russo-Japanese War of 1904 when I was twenty-six years old. By then I was attending Army Staff College. Anyhow, since it was the first war I’ve ever experienced, I was filled with horror and nervousness, enough to forget the promise made with Abe. The bullets flied all over the place and I still remember my friend’s bleeding ribs. Fortunately I survived through the war, but it was just an awful experience. I can’t even count how many times I urinated in my pants.
Until now, I was even promoted as a major general in 1929, fought against Bolshevik Army of USSR, and assigned as a commanding officer in several wars. I, Matsui Iwane, stand here as a commander of the Japanese Shanghai Expeditionary Force (SEF) of the Second Sino-Japanese War. I kept the promise
Tomorrow, I am leaving to Nanking. At Nanking, I planned to break the power of Chaing Kai-shek’s party. If I successfully finish my military operation in Nanking, my name as a military general will be immortal in Japanese history, Chinese history, and World history. I can never make any mistake. I cannot let my family down.